https://www.ucop.edu/institutional-research-academic-planning/_files/sat-act-study-report.pdf Which studies did you find that claimed GPA was the better predictor? |
The best SAT prep resources (past exams) are free. The good prep books (college panda, Erica meltzer, orange book, studylark) are relatively cheap, and free if your resort to piracy. Lastly, KhanAcademy has a great question database |
You think 1400 is very high, but 3.7 isn’t … you’re not credible. |
Good for you I guess. |
PSAT is out of 1520, so the 1400 scorer with even minimal additional prep. would like see a score in the 1450 to 1520 range anyway on the 1600 point SAT. |
To me, “very high scores” are at least 1550, at least 35, and 5. |
Excuse me? I never commented on what I meant by very high but by very high, I was referring to close to perfect SAT and GPA (except for a B+ in one art class in grade 9). The high GPA was far more difficult to achieve than the high test score given the heavy workload for many APs, honors classes and even college level classes. That is far from uncommon these days. I am aware that we could provide good test prep whereas many parents cannot afford that. I don’t want talented students from less advantaged backgrounds being excluded entry to top colleges because they can’t afford good test prep and taking test multiple times. I like the test optional trend but can imagine that bridging programs are probably needed for many students from disadvantaged backgrounds. |
Because the SAT is a test of privilege. Why not just let schools say that what works for them is accepting only kids from private schools with tuition over $45,000 a year? |
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Normally of course GPA would be a much stronger predictor of academic preparedness. But beginning some years ago, and really accelerating during Covid, grade inflation became rampant. Do you know how many 4.0 students there are at Whitman or Churchill? It's a lot. So GPA by itself is no longer a great measurement of anything.
The SAT/ACT isn't perfect. The people that study or do a formal test prep do better than kids taking it cold. But that's more a parental failure - not being aware of online and other resources. And at competitive schools, those 100-200 points matter. So kids with better informed parents have an advantage over kids with low information parents. Same as always. But studying for the test and mastering the material is demonstrative of a good, disciplined student. So it does matter. |
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we're lower middle class and my kids both just used the free Khan Academy program, got 1500+ and we're done.
I think the money thing is overstated. You can tell me some kids don't have Internet access at home, but I think that's reaching. |
A 1450 on the SAT is 99th percentile. |
No they're not. Better than what was previously available for free? Yes. Best? Nope. I taught test prep. Not all materials (even practice tests) are equal. There are better materials and formats (class and tutoring are more effective than self study). But, the Khan stuff is a good start. For a disciplined kid, I would also buy Kallis (good explanations and practice tests) and Princeton Review (some good strategy, research and practice tests). But, some kids will really benefit from a class or one-on-one format. |
What are you talking about? And what is your familiarity with the substance of current testing? |
This is so obviously written by someone who has spent very little time with the "disadvantaged" and isn't very plugged into the test prep that happens in public schools. If someone has the chops, picking up a study guide or going to the free Khan Academy prep lessons will do fine. The real problem with performance on these tests for some groups is that they are behind in math, and that has nothing to do with prepping. |
Wrong again. I am not writing this to brag but to correct your misconceptions, I Have actually lived in several poor countries serving disadvantaged communities (in refugee camps, in remote communities, with orphans and impoverished children with LDs). Even here in the US, have spent a lot of time with many homeless families in transition out of homelessness. I realize that the world is not fair but I do actually care a lot about reducing barriers to college entry for hard students. The stakes are high for people to eventually build stability, dignity and some measure of control over their lives. Even with a college degree, it is hard for many young people, to build the kind of lives we were able to build when I was young. Without a college degree, it is beyond hope for most. Precisely because have spent a lot of time in disadvantaged communities, I know there are many talented young people out there who face great odds to change their life trajectories. I also support complete reform of student loan industry as it is currently a disgrace that so many students, especially black students, end up with life long college debt for degrees they don’t even finish at third rate universities. I also agree that many students need much better college preparation. We need to find ways to do that without placing so much stress and costs on students. I stand by my position that GPA is the single most predictive factor in college success. However, I completely agree that much much more needs to be done to create fewer obstacles for College entry and graduation among students from disadvantaged communities. |